Muscat Daily

8 killed in Pakistan airstrikes on Afghanista­n, says Kabul

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Pakistani military aircraft struck homes in two provinces of Afghanista­n in predawn attacks on Monday, interim Afghan spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.

Kabul said its forces retaliated against the airstrikes by hitting Pakistani military installati­ons.

Condemning the attacks, Mujahid said eight people, including three children and five women, were killed due to the aerial strikes in the southeaste­rn Paktika and Khost provinces.

The cross-border aerial strikes were reported at around 3am (2230GMT Sunday), he added.

No official statement has been released by Islamabad on the alleged attacks, which Mujahid called a ‘ reckless violation of Afghanista­n’s territory’.

Mujahid stressed that Afghanista­n would ‘ not allow anyone to invade its territory’ and called on Pakistan to stop ‘wrong policies… and spoiling relations of the two neighbouri­ng Muslim countries’.

The airstrikes came after at least seven Pakistani troops were

killed by militants in North Waziristan’s Mir Ali area on Saturday.

Islamabad accuses Afghanista­n of failing to prevent militants from the outlawed Tehreek-e-taliban Pakistan (TTP), a conglomera­te of various militant groups, from carrying out attacks in Pakistan before returning to Afghanista­n for refuge. Afghanista­n has denied the charges.

It was in April 2022 when Pakistan had launched crossborde­r air strikes against the alleged militants of the banned group.

“The person named Abdullah Shah, who the Pakistani side claims was targeted in the incident, is in Pakistan,” Mujahid claimed.

‘Pakistani military installati­ons hit’

In a separate statement, Afghanista­n’s interim Defence Ministry described the Pakistani airstrikes as an ‘aggressive operation’, and said border forces ‘of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n retaliated by targeting Pakistan’s military installati­ons along the imaginary border with powerful weaponry’.

Afghanista­n does not recognise the Durand Line - the de facto border region between the two countries - on the grounds that it was created by a British colonial regime ‘to divide ethnic Pashtuns’.

The 2,640km (1,640-mile) border was establishe­d in 1893 as part of an agreement between India under British colonial rule and Abdur Rahman Khan, the then-ruler of Afghanista­n.

 ?? ?? Zabihullah Mujahid
Zabihullah Mujahid

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